| December
8, 2002
Motet:
One of the grandest of all of Schütz Psalm settings is
his version of today's designated Psalm 85. On a much larger
scale than even the longest of the Psalms of David 1619. The
work may have been written for some great wedding. It comes
down to us in a slightly incomplete form. The continuo part
is missing and was reconstructed by the great nineteenth-century
Schütz scholar Philip Spitta. In terms of amazing specific
text setting the work has no equal in Schütz' output.
Cantata:
BWV 7 The festival of the birth of John the Baptist was celebrated
in 1724 between the 2nd and 3rd Sundays after Trinity. The
reading was tranfered to the second Sunday in Advent in the
new prayerbook. The cantata written for that day is Bach's
La Mer: both verbally and musically, water imagery permeates
each movement. What is remarkable is that rather than becoming
merely an attractive tone poem, the music goes deeper and
deeper into this complex story. The cantata is based on the
melody "Christ unser Herr zum Jordan kam." The shape
of Luther's tune is significant. The Stollen (first section)
is typical, two contrasting phrases repeated. It is the Abgesang
(second section) that not only is longer than most, but is
unusually shaped. Five phrases build to a climax in the third
phrase. The fourth phrase not only cadences but lets down
the tension. The fifth phrase is not only unexpected but a
full octave higher in range than the previous cadence. This
unexpected and intense coda colors the whole mood of the chorale.
Bach sets the first verse as an intense and imaginative seascape.
In this work the tenors sing the chorale tune and are submerged
beneath the sopranos and altos and most of the string texture.
The principal theme is in two parts: a stern, dotted note
figure depicting the wild man in lion skins and stormy water
music. Two other subjects appear in tandem with the second
subject. The combination of all of this material gives an
unusual richness to the texture. The relative rigidity of
the phrasing of the first subject with the flexibility of
phrase length of the second gives a kind of plasticity to
the continuity that is useful for such an irregular chorale
tune. Bach is, as usual, canny in his solution to potential
balance problems with the low-lying chorale tune by thinning
out the texture for the most part to the solo concertant violins
and continuo when the chorus is singing. The shape of the
Abgesang is marvelously achieved. The natural climax of the
third phrase is set up with an unusually long orchestral interlude
using only the second subject and its related themes. The
fourth phrase is allowed to wind down and what sounds like
a recapitulation of the opening material is played. In the
midst, the last phrase is declaimed, first time that the chorus
is accompanied by the full orchestra.
The
text of the bass aria exhorts us to action, but the music
is of a more intimate nature. The bass line burbles along
amiably and the whole character is of greatest contrast to
the stormy grandeur of the chorus. Notice how the rhythmic
figure which permeates the A section is softened by the more
conversational tone of the B section. The tenor recitative
and aria enter into areas of rather complex dogma. We should
remember that this festival day is only about four weeks past
Whitsunday. The imagery of both the founding of the church
and speaking in tongues is implied here. The storminess of
the opening resumes, but with even more intensity and vigor.
The tenor declaims the text, at the top of his range, and
with an heroic athleticism against the bounding solo violins.
The leapfrogging upward arpeggios of the violins become sweet
floating descending figures at the mention of the dove. This
reference to the recent past in the tenor aria is no accident.
The similarity of the following alto aria and the tenor aria
of BWV 2 (written two days earlier!) is so striking both in
mood and the very quality of their melodies, that one must
presume that Bach wants us to here these pieces not only individually
but as a yearly cycle. The structural ramifications of this
concept are staggering. When we consider that the yearly cycle
contains 58 works at, let's say an average of twenty minutes
each, we are dealing with Ring of the Niebelungen scale. The
striking way that this aria begins with no orchestral introduction,
interrupting a recitative of a different voice, affirms that
Bach knew that this was a bold and dramatic gesture. It could
not have escaped Bach's notice that this trial by water was
somehow related to the previous week's trial by fire. The
four-voice harmonization of the chorale that ends the cantata
is so characteristic and yet so powerful that we cannot fail
to marvel at the endless inventiveness of these harmonizations.
©Craig
Smith
Translation
for this Cantata
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